For example IP Terminals, if you turn off the free license, any IP Terminals that are in use will restart. Note 1: When you turn off the free license any registered licensed devices restart.
To view the number of days remaining in the trial, you must first turn on the free license and then look in PRG command 10-52-01 or Easy Edit / Quick Install / 60 Day Trial The free license will stop running if the 60 day trial expires or it is disabled in PRG command 10-52-01 or in Easy Edit / Quick Install / 60 Day Trial If the free license is running when the 60 day trial period expires, then the features running under the free license will cease to work. The free license is turned off by default and can be turned on in PRG command 10-52-01 or in Easy Edit / Quick Install / 60 Day Trial.
When the Free License is enabled you have full access to all licensed features on the SV9100. The Free License can only be enabled on the SV9100 during the 60 day trial period. To use the free license, the 60 day trial must not have expired. Once powered on again the countdown will continue. If the CPU is powered down then the countdown will be paused until the CPU is powered on again. Whilst the CPU is powered up there is no way to stop or pause the 60 day trial, it will continue to countdown until it expires. The 60 day trial period will begin from when the CPU is first powered up and will start counting down. The rules surrounding the 60 day trial and the free license are summarised below: The Free license and 60 Day Trial The free license can only be enabled whilst the 60 day trial period is valid on the SV9100. Details for licensing IP DECT Systems can be found in IP DECT Licensing.
The PARI code is issued when the IP DECT equipment is ordered. This works in the similar way to the SV licensing model but the licenses are assigned to a unique ‘PARI’ code instead of a Hardware Key. The LMS can also be used to generate licenses for the IP DECT system. Once this has been done then a license file can be downloaded and it can be installed onto a CCPU card using PC Pro or a USB stick. The procedure involves logging the hardware key on to the LMS and then assigning a software key to the hardware key. The License Management server (LMS) is a web portal where users can logon and download a license that can be installed onto a CCPU. This hardware key can be assigned to a license code on the LMS. Each SV9100 CCPU has a unique ‘Hardware Key’.
Some of the features and hardware require an appropriate software license to be installed on a SV9100 processor in order to work.
Introduction This manual is intended to give an overview on how the licensing procedure operates on the SV9100 platform. 11 Notification When a license is Generated. We do not do much inter-vlan routing accept for administration.SV9100 Licensing Manual Version 1.2 for R3 System SoftwareĬontents Introduction. I prefer to do this at the Phone and SV9100 system side. There are managed switches that will automatically detect that you are connecting a VOIP device and tag its traffic as VOICE and place this traffic in the VOICE VLAN you have designated. I agree with M to just use one switch for both traffic and let the VLAN tagging separate the traffic. One of the most common errors I see is that the uplink port don't have access to both VLANS so the VOIP VLAN cant reach the Firewall / Router. You do need the ability to route traffic between VLANs and our firewall takes care of that. The SV9100 must have a static IP Address but the phone can use DHCP. Our phone have a second port on them that we use for the PCs and theses ports have VLAN disabled so they use the default VLAN. The interface on the SV9100 and the phones have the ability to tag their traffic with the VOIP VLAN.
90% of the switch pots are programmed to have access to both VLAN and our firewall provides the inter-vlan routing and DHCP for both VLANS. We use separate VLANs for our VOIP and data traffic and have a SV9100.